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  1. 26 de mar. de 2024 · German uses the 26 letters of the English alphabet. In addition, German has a character ß called eszett (or scharfes-S) and three umlaut vowels ä, ö and ü. So, altogether there are 30 letters in the German alphabet but there are a lot more sounds than letters (to get started watch this video to learn how to pronounce individual German letters).

  2. 30. The letter ß is called Eszett, literally meaning s z. However, when the letter is not available (or when a word is in all caps), ß is almost always substituted by the digraph ss rather than sz (e.g. STRASSE rather than STRASZE). While this fact is well documented (e.g. on Wikipedia ), and it’s also documented that substitution by sz ...

  3. "Hello all!Our German word of the day is 'ß'Thinking what it means?It means 'ss' Wondering how to pronounce it? It’s very easy to learn its correct pronunc...

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  4. 10 de out. de 2019 · So in the Fraktur times, it was conventional to use Sperrsatz (spacing) to highlight text. But you see, then Antiqua became more popular. Which actually allowed you to use Majuskelschrift. And that’s all fine. But here’s the thing: German words have never began with a ß. So a Großes ẞ was never necessary with Fraktur.

  5. Once you really get into German, and many other European languages, you'll need to learn how to type umlauts. Umlauts are the special extra letters in German and other European languages: ä, ö and ü. German also has another letter, the eszett: ß, which is also included in this tutorial. In German speaking countries, the standard keyboard is a bit different

  6. 25 de mai. de 2011 · An ß is always sharp, not vocalized (like the english s in ass, unlike the german s, which is very often pronounced like the z in lazy). Whether or not you use an ß is usually determined by the length of the vowel preceding the s/ß: You never have an ß after a short vowel. For example, muß (must) used to be correct, but since '96, it's muss.

  7. 25 de fev. de 2020 · For a long time Germany has been playing around with the letters 'ss' which are sometimes, but not always, written as a separate letter ß. This letter has undergone some changes but even after modern reforms, hasn't been abandoned. Sometimes it's ß, sometimes ss, sometimes ſs, and sometimes ſz (long-S variants).